Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to share a recent publication investigating the effects of
reduced boat traffic on the marine soundscape during New Zealand's COVID-19
lockdown at the beginning of 2020. This lockdown saw a ban on recreational
traffic and a dramatic reduction in commercial traffic, with benefits to
the communication ranges of different species in the Gulf.

Pine, M. K., Wilson, L., Jeffs, A. G., McWhinnie, L., Juanes, F., Sceuderi,
A., & Radford, C. A. (2021). A Gulf in lockdown: How an enforced ban on
recreational vessels increased dolphin and fish communication ranges. *Global
Change Biology*. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15798

>From midnight of 26 March 2020, New Zealand became one of the first
countries to enter a strict lockdown to combat the spread of COVID-19. The
lockdown banned all non-essential services and travel both on land and sea.
Overnight, the country's busiest coastal waterway, the Hauraki Gulf Marine
Park, became devoid of almost all recreational and non-essential commercial
vessels. An almost instant change in the marine soundscape ensued, with
ambient sound levels in busy channels dropping nearly threefold the first
12 h. This sudden drop led fish and dolphins to experience an immediate
increase in their communication ranges by up to an estimated 65%. Very low
vessel activity during the lockdown (indicated by the presence of vessel
noise over the day) revealed new insights into cumulative noise effects
from vessels on auditory masking. For example, at sites nearer Auckland
City, communication ranges increased approximately 18 m (22%) or 50 m (11%)
for every 10% decrease in vessel activity for fish and dolphins,
respectively. However, further from the city and in deeper water, these
communication ranges were increased by approximately 13 m (31%) or 510 m
(20%). These new data demonstrate how noise from small vessels can impact
underwater soundscapes and how marine animals will have to adapt to
ever-growing noise pollution.

Please reach out if you have any questions or would like a .pdf of the
article (lwil...@aucklanduni.ac.nz).
Ngā mihi,
Louise

Louise Wilson
PhD Candidate
Leigh Marine Lab
160 Goat Island Road, Leigh, 0985

+64 (0) 27 258 6639
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